It is simply a fraction: nothing more, nothing less.
You can get a repeating fraction with any denominator whose prime factors include some numbers other than 2 or 5. This is because 2 and 5 are the prime factors of 10 - the base of our decimal system. In this case, the denominator can be any of: 3, 6, 7, 9
Reduce the fraction to its simplest form - that is, remove any common factors between the numerator and denominator. If the denominator now is a factor of some power of 10, that is, if the denominator is of the form 2a*5b then the fraction will me a terminating decimal. If not, it will not.
Just write ANY fraction, with a polynomial in the numerator, and a polynomial in the denominator.
In general: The reciprocal of a fraction is obtained by interchanging the numerator and the denominator, i.e. by inverting the fraction.2/33/217/2424/17
The word "common" indicates that there will be at least two. You have one. Your answer will be some multiple of 4.
That is not true. 2/7 is a fraction and 7 is not a multiple of 10.
A fraction whose denominator is different to that of some reference fraction.
A fraction is terminating when the fraction, in simplest terms, has a denominator whose only prime factors are 2 and 5. This is related to the fact that our decimal system is based on the number 10 = 2 x 5. Any other prime factor in the denominator - 3, 7, 11, etc. - will be recurring.A fraction is terminating when the fraction, in simplest terms, has a denominator whose only prime factors are 2 and 5. This is related to the fact that our decimal system is based on the number 10 = 2 x 5. Any other prime factor in the denominator - 3, 7, 11, etc. - will be recurring.A fraction is terminating when the fraction, in simplest terms, has a denominator whose only prime factors are 2 and 5. This is related to the fact that our decimal system is based on the number 10 = 2 x 5. Any other prime factor in the denominator - 3, 7, 11, etc. - will be recurring.A fraction is terminating when the fraction, in simplest terms, has a denominator whose only prime factors are 2 and 5. This is related to the fact that our decimal system is based on the number 10 = 2 x 5. Any other prime factor in the denominator - 3, 7, 11, etc. - will be recurring.
The denominator will change for some operations and not for others.
You can get a repeating fraction with any denominator whose prime factors include some numbers other than 2 or 5. This is because 2 and 5 are the prime factors of 10 - the base of our decimal system. In this case, the denominator can be any of: 3, 6, 7, 9
set, whole, numerator, and denominator
Reduce the fraction to its simplest form - that is, remove any common factors between the numerator and denominator. If the denominator now is a factor of some power of 10, that is, if the denominator is of the form 2a*5b then the fraction will me a terminating decimal. If not, it will not.
An improper fraction is one in which the numerator is larger than the denominator, as a result of which the value of the fraction is greater than one, and it could be expressed therefore as some integer plus a proper fraction in which the numerator is smaller than the denominator.
Any fraction whose numerator (top number) is larger than the denominator (bottom number), for example 2/3, 11/20, or 59/93.
1/22/33/44/55/66/77/88/99/1010/1111/1212/1313/1414/1515/1616/1717/1818/1919/20What's the point ?Oh I get it ! A fraction whose numerator and denominator have no common factor greater than 1 is a fraction that is reduced to lowest terms.
A fraction is a kind of number: it cannot have an answer. You want an answer to some process that is applied to the fraction but we have no hope of guessing what process that might be.
Just write ANY fraction, with a polynomial in the numerator, and a polynomial in the denominator.